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Happy Birthday Mel Brooks

On this date in 1926, comedic genius Mel Brooks (né Melvin James Kaminsky) was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., to Kate (Brookman) and Max Kaminsky, whose Jewish lineage stemmed from Poland and Ukraine. His father died of kidney disease at age 34 when Brooks was 2, and he grew up in tenement housing.

He was drafted in 1944 into the U.S. Army after enrolling at Brooklyn College for a year. He served as a combat engineer defusing land mines in France and Germany, was promoted to corporal and participated in the Battle of the Bulge.

Unenthused about a clerk's job his mother had lined up for him at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, he started working in Borscht Belt resorts and nightclubs in the Catskills as a drummer, pianist and stand-up comic. His friend Sid Caesar hired him as a TV comedy writer, and in 1950 he worked on Caesar's variety series "Your Show of Shows" with Carl Reiner, Neil Simon and others.

After he moved to Hollywood in 1960, he and Reiner created the "2000 Year Old Man" character, which went on to be featured on five successful comedy albums and numerous TV sketches. Brooks played a man claiming he'd witnessed Jesus Christ's crucifixion, had 42,000 children "and not one comes to visit me."

With Buck Henry he created the TV spy spoof "Get Smart" that aired from 1965-70. His first feature film, "The Producers" (1967), won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar and was a Broadway smash. That Brooks could make "Springtime for Hitler" palatable in the mainstream and arguably hilarious, says a lot about his talents.

"People like rabbis would write to me and say, 'This is execrable.' And I'd say, 'You can't bring folks like Hitler down by getting on a soapbox – they're better at it than we are. But if you can humiliate them, ridicule them, and have people laugh at them – you've won.' I knew 'Springtime for Hitler' was perfect, I knew it was right." (Men's Journal, June 2013)

He went on in the last third of the 20th century to join the elite as an actor, director and producer on screen and stage. "Blazing Saddles" and "Young Frankenstein" in 1974 were followed by "Silent Movie," "High Anxiety," "History of the World, Part I," "Spaceballs" and "Robin Hood: Men in Tights."

A musical adaptation of "The Producers" ran on Broadway from 2001-07 and was remade into a musical film in 2005. A successful Broadway run started in 2007 for "Young Frankenstein," which Brooks has called his best film. He continued to work into his 90s and published a memoir in 2021 titled "All About Me!: My Remarkable Life in Show Business."

He married Florence Baum, a professional dancer with Broadway credits, in 1953. They had three children: Stephanie (b. 1956), Nicholas (b. 1957) and Edward (b. 1959). The marriage ended in 1962 and he married actress Anne Bancroft in 1964. They had a son, Maximilian (b. 1972), and were together until her death in 2005. In a 2021 interview, he called himself "very, very lucky" to be married to Bancroft. "And I, if I believed in God, I would thank God every night for giving me Anne Bancroft." (NPR "Fresh Air," Dec. 7, 2021)

He was asked in the interview if religion was "something you want at this point in your life, or are you remaining as secular as you've always been?" He replied: "Being afraid I'm going to die has not made me more religious. I'm still — I'm tribal. I love being a Jew, and I love Jewish humor, and I loved the — I don't know, the je ne sais quoi that the Jews — they have a wonderful attitude. You know, I guess it's called survival.

"If you're not indoctrinated into some kind of religion when you're very young, then it can play very little. I'm rather secular. I'm basically Jewish. But I think I'm Jewish not because of the Jewish religion at all. I think it's the relationship with the people and the pride I have."

—Brooks on what role religion plays in life, Men's Journal (June 2013)
exexec · 61-69, C
Thank you for this. I love the humor of Mel Brooks.
hunkalove · 61-69, M
My mother would have been 100 today. She died two days after her 55th birthday.
Mindful · 56-60, F
Thank you for sharing.
@BlueSkyKing My wife and I and her sister and her husband saw Blazing Saddles when it came out 74/75 at the local theater. At the opening scene my sister-in- law LOL and yelled "He kicked the bucket!" for a few seconds she was the first in the theater to 'get it'. Hilarious move 👍 😂
@softspokenman I first saw it as a sneak preview with a couple of friends. We were at a large pack theater and everyone was on the floor. The Oscars showed a clip before the release earlier that year. It was when Bart rode and was "welcomed". All uncensored.
exexec · 61-69, C
My son-in-law had never been to a musical and thought they would be totally boring. We took him with us to see "The Producers," and I though he would hurt himself by laughing so hard. He has been a Mel Brooks fan ever since.
Budwick · 70-79, M
Mel Brooks is a comedic genius.

And, thankfully he produced some great films before the politically correct horseshit came along. MOst of his stuff wouldn't have been made in today's culture.
DocSavage · M
Not only is it authentic frontier gibberish. It expresses a courage seldom seen nowadays…
A wonderful tribute to a wonderful man who gave us so many great laughs!
Mel Brooks Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Film Industry June 7, 2013
GovanDUNNY · M
You forgot "The twelve chairs"
@GovanDUNNY I thought of that too. It’s rarely shown and I only saw it once.
RedBaron · M
Excellent copy-paste job.
Fukfacewillie · 56-60, M
Springtime for Hitler is still totally shocking and brilliant. Just imagine how shocking it was in 1968!

Young Frankenstein has not aged one bit.

Blazing Saddles could not be made today.

Max Brooks, his son, is a very funny and intelligent man who made his own way.
uncalled4 · 56-60, M
Mel has been a comic treasure since the dawn of time. And he's a drummer!

 
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